I haven't heard a whole lot about what way planned for this, but time out has a pretty good article about Virtue ,and their first offering RedStreak.
Link to TimeOut articleNow it’s time for a test. “Okay,” Hall says to me, “what do you think the ingredient list should be on a bottle of cider?” Hall, seated at a wooden farmhouse–style table at Virtue headquarters in Roscoe Village, picks up a bottle of Crispin (a popular U.S.-produced brand of cider that bills itself as “ultra-premium”) and begins reading from the ingredient list: “hard cider, apple juice concentrate, natural flavors, malic acid, sulfites.”
“Brewers—even the biggest brewers in the world—are still using water, malt, hops and yeast,” he says. “Even the biggest wineries are using grapes. The biggest cider makers are using apple-juice concentrate and sugar. Nobody would do that in brewing or wine making.”
Surveying the widely available ciders, Hall sees a landscape not unlike that of craft beer two decades ago. “I remember in, like, 1988, ’89, people would come into Goose Island and say, ‘Hey, do you have any domestic beers?’ And we’re like, ‘This is Chicago, America, it’s all domestic. It’s made right here.’ [They’d say:] ‘No, you only make imports.’ It’s like: You don’t even know what that means. People just didn’t know what beer was supposed to taste like. And it’s exactly like that with cider today.”
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But cider is more than a personal passion: It’s an endeavor Hall sees as “virtuous,” hence the company’s name, which was inspired by the principles of the Slow Food Chicago organization, where he was a board member. “If I can source many apples [100,000 pounds this year, 1 million soon] and plant more trees, that’s a good thing,” Hall says. “And if I can support farmers and pay a premium for specific apples, there may be more families who can stay in farming.”
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Hall has similar plans for cider, and he’s not waiting until early 2012, when RedStreak hits the market, to implement them. For the past three years, Hall has traveled to New York to teach beer-and-cheese classes at the iconic Murray’s Cheese Shop. Now those classes include lessons on cider, too. Last week, Hall coordinated a cider dinner at C-House, in which four courses (e.g., venison tenderloin with hay-roasted parsnips) were paired with a different cider from the French producer Dupont, at whose estate Hall spent a few weeks in October. Is cider ever going to be as big as craft beer? “No,” Hall replies. “No chance. But, I mean, right now, [the cider market] is just so, so tiny” that there’s plenty of room for growth. Just as soon as Hall can find the fruit.